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12201196078?profile=originalThe Photographers’ Gallery has launched the Soho Photography Quarter (SPQ), a permanent new outdoor cultural space, presenting the very best of contemporary photography, for free. Offering dynamic new ways to discover the photographic medium, Soho Photography Quarter follows the refurbishment of Ramillies Place, which has transformed a previously overlooked alley into a beautifully designed, pedestrianised space and offers an inspiring gateway to Soho. The launch of the space extends The Photographers’ Gallery’s acclaimed exhibitions programme beyond the walls of the building and completes the development of its site in Soho as a centre of Photography.

A tranquil and accessible cultural space only seconds from Oxford Street, Soho Photography Quarter will present a rotating, open-air programme of site-specific and interactive artworks, which will change twice a year. The presentations will feature a significant art frieze in the main square, large-scale over street banners, plus moving image projections, soundscapes and other interactive works depending on the project.

Alongside the changing artworks, the Gallery will present a rich and engaging programme of activities and resources. From live events, artist talks and presentations, to short films, sound installations and specially commissioned AR projects, accessibility to the ideas and inspirations behind the projects will be a key part of SPQ’s offer.

12201196482?profile=originalThe opening presentation for Soho Photography Quarter, Being Human Human Being, comprises a large-scale, site-specific installation of works - including a large-scale art frieze, cross street banners, soundscapes and projections - by the acclaimed Indigenous Australian contemporary artist, Dr. Christian Thompson AO, presented in partnership with Photo Australia / PHOTO 2022 International Festival of Photography, Melbourne. The Being Human Human Being installation is also one of the highlights of UK/Australia Season 2021-22, the largest ever cultural exchange between the two nations presented jointly by the Australian Government and the British Council.

Brett Rogers, Director, The Photographers’ Gallery, says: “Soho Photography Quarter (SPQ) represents the realisation of a long-awaited vision to transform the public area outside The Photographers' Gallery into a welcoming, prominent cultural and social destination for people to encounter extraordinary images for free. Photography is one of our foremost and most accessible cultural forms, so being able to showcase the very best of what’s being created in this field for everyone to enjoy feels like a really valuable addition to the cultural offer in the West End. SPQ will present a wide range of work from world-class photographers, extending the Gallery’s passion and commitment to the medium beyond the Gallery walls and engaging new audiences, who might not otherwise experience it. We will also offer free events, talks and other activities in the space to enhance visitor experience and bring the works to life.”

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12201195657?profile=originalThe restoration of the grave of one of the great names of photography, Alvin Langdon Coburn (1882-1966) has been completed. A call for support was made in 2021 and the project has been led by Brian Iddon. In addition to private donations, the Universal Order, which was bequeathed Coburn's copyrights also supported the restoration. The grave is at Llandrillo-yn-Rhos, north Wales.

It is hoped that a public event will be held and an indication of support for this can be made to brianiddon53@gmail.com

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12201169059?profile=originalBradford's National Science and Media Museum is recruit for three curatorial positions: Head Curator, Curator of Photography and Photographic Technology and an Assistant Curator. 

As Head Curator you will play a pivotal leadership role in National Science and Media Museum’s senior leadership team, contributing to strategic planning and decision-making across all areas. You will lead the Curatorial and Archives team to ensure work is delivered in line with museum priorities and to shape the museum’s narrative through exhibitions, events and public programmes, increasing physical and intellectual access to the collections.

As well as developing our historic collections, you will champion our ambitions to research and collect more contemporary materials, working collaboratively with key academic and industrial partners, particularly in areas such as the digital and creative industries. Details:  https://bit.ly/3NVdY2C Deadline - 07/07/2022

 As the Curator of Photography and Photographic Technology you will take a leading role on championing and raising the profile of our world class collections of photography and photographic technology.

This is a highly collaborative role which will involve working alongside other specialist Archivists and Curators and fostering links with internal and external stakeholders in photography and photographic technology communities. Working closely with the masterplan team, exhibitions team and digital content teams you will develop the content and interpretation for our new permanent galleries, Sound & Vision, as well as our temporary exhibition programme. Details: https://bit.ly/3znZowx Deadline – 03/07/2022

 As Assistant Curator, you will critically engage with our core collection areas of photography, photographic technology, film, television, broadcasting and sound, supporting access to our objects, archives and resources. In this role, you will field enquiries, facilitate research access and public engagement. You will be leading collection tours, as well as assisting the Curatorial team and volunteers to research, utilise and manage the collections.

You will also actively find ways to engage with our audiences by showcasing and celebrating our world-class collections of image and sound technologies. This might involve writing blogs about objects and the stories behind them or creating content for websites and other digital platforms to aid the promotion of activities at the museum.Details: https://bit.ly/3mtnyhw Deadline - 29/06/2022

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12201196883?profile=originalThe Royal Photographic Society’s Historical Group was formed on 22 March 1972 at a time when photography in Britain was undergoing a significant transition. The RPS, itself, was in a process of modernisation as it sought to remain relevant to British photography. The way photography was taught in higher education reflected a move away from the technical to a focus on approach and the content of the picture. New galleries showing photography were established, national museums and galleries began to take photography seriously and the Arts Council appointed its first photography officer.

The period also saw major upheavals for the industry and the profession with recessions, a move to digital, and new ways for commissioners to source content. The way photography was experienced, shared and disseminated changed dramatically later in the period with the advent of new digital technologies.

This conference will examine some of these changes through a series of papers that look at British photography and photographers over the fifty years from 1972-2022.

British Photography since 1972: a conference
Organised by the RPS Historical Group to commemorative its 50th anniversary
1-2 July 2022
Bristol and online
Programme and booking: https://rps.org/1972conf

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On April 8th, Poster House opened an exhibition featuring a portion of Dwight Cleveland's extensive vintage poster and lobby card collection. The collection focuses on all Underrepresented groups that are only now receiving the celebration they deserve. This exhibition highlights films where Women, in particular, played a significant role behind the camera during the silent film era. For more information on poster images see Dwight's book on https://cinemaonpaper.com/.  

This special exhibition will be up at Poster House in New York City through October 9, 2022:

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12201194859?profile=originalFlints Auctions is offering a selection of cameras in its next auction. Of particular British interest and a highlight is a James A Sinclair Tropical Una High Power Telephoto 'Everest' Outfit (lot 110). Estimated at £2000-3000 the camera is one of very few examples offered at auction. The camera was exhibited at the recent London Photographica fair. 

The only recent sales are in 2009 at Westlicht) and an incomplete example which was offered at SAS on 26 April 2022 (lot 107). The Flints example features a Dallmeyer lens engraved with the same serial number as that in the SAS auction (lot 110)


UPDATE: the SInclair camera sold for £6,875 including BP.

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12201199869?profile=originalIn 2019 New Zealand's Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetū held an exhibition Hidden Light: Early Canterbury and West Coast Photography which highlighted the contribution of pioneering photographers at work in nineteenth-century Te Waipounamu, New Zeland's South Island. Spectacular landscapes by skilled amateurs and professionals join powerful images of tangata whenua, settlers and mining scenes. Unseen work by a small number of early women photographers is also included.

The exhibition publication has been out of print for several years but is now available as a free download with texts from curator Ken Hall and Haruhiko Sameshima.

Details and download here: https://christchurchartgallery.org.nz/about/library/publications/hidden-light-early-canterbury-and-west-coast-photo

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12201197095?profile=originalYour chance to acquire paper negatives and daguerreotypes; travel and exploration, fashion and press photographs; and introducing contemporary photographers working with early processes.

Exhibitors include Maggs Bris, Lisa Tao, Richard Meara, Linus Carr, Hugh Ashley Rayner, James Kerr, Bruno Tartarin, Daniella Dangoor, James Hyman, Paul Cordes, Jenny Allsworth, England and Co, Robert Hershkowitz, Yoke Matze, Jane Orde, Anthony Jones, Elspeth Ross and Adnan Sezwer. The fair is sponsored by Chiswick Auctions' Photographica department. 

The Classic Photograph Fair
12 June 2022, 0900-1600
Free entry
Conway Hall, 25 Red Lion Square, London, WC1R 4RL
https://www.classicphotofair.co.uk/

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12201197272?profile=originalWork on post-war African photographies over the last several years has attempted definitively to leave behind blunt understandings of the medium and practice as only an instrument of colonial control. Instead, scholars have shown the active role that photography and its institutions played in reimagining political citizenship and possibility in the waning colonial and newly independent African states, even as the continent was subjected to the wider geopolitical machinations of the Cold War. In this afternoon session, we shall consider some of the most recent work on photography in Africa, and reflect on methodological issues and prospects in its study.

Drew Thompson, Darren Newbury and Jennifer Bajorek are featured speakers, followed by a discussion.

Drew Thompson (Bard Graduate Center) – ‘Decolonization in Africa and Photography’

This story begins in Maputo and takes you to Cambridge (Massachusetts) via Johannesburg. I will start in April of 1974, when a coup toppled the Portuguese regime and initiated the end of colonial rule in Mozambique. Settlers left behind the photography business they started. To establish order the independent state nationalized the entire photography industry. Almost 8,000 miles away, Black American workers at the Polaroid Corporation’s U.S. headquarters protested the company’s business in South Africa. How then does the end of colonial rule in Mozambique connect to boycotts over Polaroid’s South African business? To answer this question, I highlight how the Polaroid worker protests conflicted with certain material realities and the protests unfolding in South(-ern) Africa. Decolonization in Southern Africa was anything but unified and straightforward, partially because of photography’s own disruptive nature.

Darren Newbury (University of Brighton) - ‘Don’t Touch Those Windows’: United States Information Service Exhibits in Africa

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the emergence of newly independent African nations on the world stage precipitated a contest for influence on the continent by the Cold War superpowers. One response of the US government was to mount a campaign of ‘photographic diplomacy’. This presentation considers the forms in which photographs were brought to audiences across Africa through United States Information Service (USIS) field posts. USIS offices provided the network of distribution points for photographs arriving from the US either as specific field requests or in regular packets, and many had windows facing onto the street that were used to curate a changing series of exhibitions and displays. The monthly reports, frequent memos and occasional photographs that record these activities enable a kind of historical ethnography of photographic practice. They provide insights into the work that the photographs were being asked to perform, how the task was understood by those on the ground and the impact of local circumstances.

 Jennifer Bajorek (Hampshire College/VIAD Research Centre, University of Johannesburg) – ‘What we thought we knew’

We remain in a frenzy of activity thinking, rethinking, and reframing the nexus of photography and decolonization, perhaps particularly, but not exclusively, in Africa. How have the hypotheses and presuppositions that may once have sparked our research/art practice on this question been transformed by more recent work? What are the consequences of these transformations for how we understand both photography and decolonization? I am particularly interested in the persistent tensions between documentary or evidentiary and imaginative or poetic functions of the photographic image, or those between the grain of the voice (in oral history or testimony) and the grain of the image. I will touch on my own and others’ research and/or art practice.

Hosted by Birkbeck's History and Theory of Photography Research Centre

Decolonization and Photography in Africa: Drew Thompson, Darren Newbury and Jennifer Bajorek 
Friday, 10 June, 1600 – 1800 (BST) | 1700-1900 (CET)
Online, via Microsoft Teams

registration here.

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Online: A lens on the weather

12201193891?profile=originalBringing together insights from environmental history and photographic history, this lecture focuses on climate and weather as subjects understood in and through photographic images, and the ways in which weather and climate shape the very possibility of photography in the first place. Focussing on specific historical examples, it explores how weather changes are seen, felt and experienced by people, in relation to the ways in which photography “senses” changes in the atmosphere around it, and also with respect to the emotional atmosphere or collective mood captured by photographs of extreme and unusual weather. J

Originally given on 25 May 2022 jointly by Professor Georgina Endfield, Professor of Environmental History, and Professor Michelle Henning, Chair in Photography and Media.

The recording of the lecture is available here: https://stream.liv.ac.uk/rtqm9ecu

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12201199254?profile=originalLondon's Alpine Club, which was founded in 1857 and maintains an important collection of photography is exhibiting an Historic Mountain Photographs. The selection of rarely-exhibited mountain photographs is on display at the headquarters of the Alpine Club in Shoreditch, London.

The photographs, which date from the 1860s to the 1920s, depict a number of iconic peaks, located mainly in the European Alps, but stretching as far afield as Japan, the Karakoram Range and the Canadian Rockies. Among the selection are compositions by Edward Whymper, WF Donkin, Fanny Bullock Workman and Vittorio Sella.

The exhibition is made up entirely of original photographs, many of which were enlarged by the photographers and all of which were taken while on expedition. Many of the works remain in their original frames, having been presented to the Alpine Club by the photographers shortly after they were taken.

Exhibition curator Bernie Ingrams said: “The works on display are among the finest photographs in the Alpine Club Collection. Thanks to the large format of these images, visitors will be treated to a level of detail and sense of scale that only the best mountain photography can offer.

The exhibition is set to run until 31st July, with booking available from 10am – 4pm, Monday to Friday by contacting the Alpine Club office on 0207 613 0755 or by email at admin@alpine-club.org.uk. The Alpine Club’s premises are located at 55 Charlotte Road, London, EC2A 3QF.

Historic Mountain Photographs
until 31 July 2022
Alpine Club, 55 Charlotte Road, London, EC2A 3QF
See: http://www.alpine-club.org.uk/events/past-future-exhibitions

Image: W. Donkin, The Dent du Géant and Glacier des Périades from the Aiguille du Tacul, 1882

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12201197078?profile=originalA major exhibition of photographs by Paul Trevor documents a dramatic struggle for justice. Following the racist murder of Altab Ali in May 1978, east London’s young Bengali community took to the streets in protest. Four Corners’ new exhibition, Brick Lane 1978: The Turning Point, brings together seventy of Paul Trevor’s images alongside accounts of pioneering activists, to produce a powerful narrative of the time.

The show marks the culmination of a major heritage project led by Four Corners and Swadhinata Trust with a dedicated group of volunteers, and who have interviewed many people involved in these momentous events. The exhibition pays tribute to a generation whose actions changed the course of civil rights in the UK.

Julie Begum, Chair of Swadhinata Trust, said, “It is important to commemorate Altab Ali Day to remember the racist violence the Bengali community faced in the East End of London, and to celebrate the community’s united defence to defeat the evils of racism.

Paul Trevor said: "They say a photo is worth a thousand words. But sometimes, as in this case, words are essential. This project is an opportunity to add the voices of those who made history to the images of that story.

Carla Mitchell, Artistic Development Director at Four Corners said: “This history is highly relevant today, with an increase of racist attacks and violence making the headlines. Thanks to National Lottery players we will be able to ensure that this powerful heritage is made publicly accessible for a wide audience of current & future generations.”

Brick Lane 1978: The Turning Point
10 June – 10 September 2022
Free admission. Opening hours 11am-6pm, Tues- Sat, until 8pm Thurs
Four Corners Gallery, 121 Roman Road, Bethnal Green, London E2 0QN

See: Exhibition: https://www.fourcornersfilm.co.uk/whats-on/brick-lane-1978-the-turning-point-1 and events:  https://www.fourcornersfilm.co.uk/whats-on/brick-lane-1978-the-turning-point

Image: © Paul Trevor.  Outside Bethnal Green police station, London, 17 July 1978. Sit down protest, demanding the release of two arrested demonstrators.

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12201196676?profile=originalAt the beginning of the 20th century many professional photographers with studios in Croydon town centre supplemented their income from portraits, weddings and school groups by producing postcards of local views and events. One in particular, Charles Harrison Price (1870-1946), developed an especially broad catalogue that besides superbly composed topographical pictures included the vibrancy of air-side views of Croydon Airport – Britain’s major, and only international airport during the interwar years, the compassionate nurturing of injured military personnel during World War I housed in hospitals in local schools and the lives of their carers, popular town parades and celebrations, parks and open spaces, local actors and newsworthy events.

Croydon Natural History & Scientific Society assisted by Bourne Society is exhibiting from its John Gent Postcards Collection a display of Charles Harrison Price photographs that allows a unique insight into life in the borough of Croydon during the first half of the 20th century.

Croydon through the lens of Charles Harrison Price: historic images from Croydon Natural History & Scientific Society.

Croydon through the lens of Charles Harrison Price
Until 10 July 2022
Tuesdays and Thursdays between 4.30 – 7.30pm and on s
elected weekends between 12-5pm
Free
Stanley Arts,  12 South Norwood Hill, London, SE25 6AB
https://stanleyarts.org/events/?tribe_paged=1&tribe_event_display=list&tribe_eventcategory%5B%5D=14

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12201196861?profile=originalAnother Country offers a lively, vital rethinking of British documentary photography over the last seven decades. This collection includes a diverse range of photographers working in an exciting array of photographic and artistic modes, encompassing images from iconic reportage to photo-text pieces, from self-portraits to political photo-collages.

As Britain takes an increasingly significant place in the history of documentary photography, award-winning photography writer and critic Gerry Badger brings context and breadth to the conversation. Organized chronologically, each chapter spans a particular period of social and cultural history, focusing on the major photographers, figures, institutions, publications and galleries that shaped the photographic climate of their time, as well as the broader tastes of the era. Chapter-by-chapter picture sections present famous works alongside forgotten masterpieces, interspersed with focused commentaries on selected photographs by both Badger and a range of contributors. This multilayered approach provides a rich understanding of the evolution and sheer variety of British documentary photography.

As the BJP review notes: 'the book’s key theme – and the thread which holds together the work of photographers from Nadav Kander to Nigel Henderson – is the closing of the space between ‘documentary’ and ‘art’ photography. The genres are, Badger says, one in the same – both are simultaneously the fiction and the truth of each photographer.'

A seminar day looking at some of themes explored in the book takes place on 11 June 2022 at the Martin Parr Foundation, Bristol. See: https://www.martinparrfoundation.org/events/another-country/


Another Country: Documentary Photography Since 1945
Gerry Badger, with contributions by Lydia Caston, Ekow Eshun, Clare Grafik, Hana Kaluznick, J. A. Mortram, Rianna Jade Parker, Simon Roberts, Lou Stoppard, Bindi Vora and Val Williams.
Thames & Hudson In collaboration with the Martin Parr Foundation on 19 May 2022
£50
https://thamesandhudson.com/another-country-british-documentary-photography-since-1945-9780500022177

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12201201471?profile=originalRachel Nordstrom has announced that she will be leaving her post as Photographic Collections Manager at the University of St Andrews, at the end of May. She has been at St Andrews for nine years and was appointed to her current role in 2015.

Rachel has accepted a post at Historic Environment Scotland as Operations Manager for their National Collection of Aerial Photography. This is a fascinating collection which spans nearly 100 years and holds not only all declassified aerial reconnaissance from WWII onwards, but land surveys dating back to the 1920s from across Europe, along with commonwealth surveys from around the world. As she notes "with over 30 million photos there will be lots for me to do!"

She joins on 15 June and can be contact from that date at: Rachel.Nordstorm@hes.scot 

During her time at St Andrews Rachel has raised the profile of the photography holdings at St Andrews and was instrumental in realising the St Andrews photography festival and associated conferences https://www.standrewsphotographyfestival.com/

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12201199086?profile=originalThe Scotsman is reporting today that documentary photographer Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert has gifted his archive to St Andrews University, in part with the support and advice of Rachel Nordstrom. Jeremy is a founder member of Document Scotland.

As The Scotsman notes: 

Mr Sutton-Hibbert started taking pictures aged nine, with his pet cat and family holidays among his first subjects. He later went to Glasgow College of Building and Printing with his growing abilities with a camera helping to fuel his need to travel and explore.

While Scotland remains a constant seam of his work, he has spent more three decades “travelling the world twice”, with overseas assignments including aftermath of 9/11 in New York, the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan and whaling in the Southern Ocean.

Read the full story here: https://www.scotsman.com/news/national/photographer-gifts-one-million-images-that-help-tell-the-story-of-scotland-3710781

See: https://www.documentscotland.com/ and https://www.jeremysuttonhibbert.com/

Image: East European 'klondyker' fish factory ships at anchor off the Shetland Isles, where they had come to buy herring and mackerel. 1994. PIC: Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert

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12201198875?profile=originalTo celebrate and mark Her Majesty The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, the National Portrait Gallery presents a new digital display, a competition for families, as well as an exclusively designed range of products to commemorate the Queen’s 70-year reign.

The Gallery’s Collection includes over a thousand portraits of the Queen, and a new digital display will allow online visitors to explore a selection of those works, as well as an animated timeline of her reign. It will also feature an illustration of Dorothy Wilding’s portrait, Queen Elizabeth II (1952), taken just 20 days after she ascended to the throne, using a photomontage of 207 individual portraits. From the earliest of images depicting the Princess Elizabeth’s ‘Merry Smile,’ to the official photographs taken throughout her reign by the likes of Dorothy Wilding, Tim Graham and William Horton, this online display will give visitors the chance to explore some of the most iconic portraits of the Queen, while learning more about the artists who captured them. Horton’s photograph of the Queen, taken in 1945 at the Auxiliary Territorial Service Training Centre in Camberley, sits alongside an earlier photograph, depicting the Queen and Princess Margaret as children, with broadcasting microphones at Windsor Castle on 13 October 1940, carrying out wartime public duties. In addition to photography, the display also includes works by Pietro Annigoni, who painted the Queen in 1969 wearing the red robes of the Order of the British Empire, and Michael Leonard, whose painting was commissioned to mark Her Majesty’s 60th birthday.

Taking further inspiration from the Collection, the Gallery has also launched a new competition, inviting families to explore the Queen’s reign through her portraits. By recreating their favourite photographs, paintings, drawings, prints and sculptures that depict the Queen, families have the chance to exhibit their winning portraits on the Gallery’s website. Judged by the National Portrait Gallery’s Youth Forum and photographer Kymara Akinpelumi, whose work was exhibited in the prestigious Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize 2021, all winners will also receive a Jubilee-themed bundle of gifts, including a copy of Elizabeth II: Princess, Queen, Icon (£14.95), a special book published to commemorate the Platinum Jubilee. Recreations should be submitted through the Gallery’s competition portal by 5pm on 17 May 2022. The winners will be announced on the Gallery’s social media channels on the Platinum Jubilee weekend in June.

See portraits of the Queen from NPG Collection here.

Image: Queen Elizabeth II by Dorothy Wilding, bromide print, 26 February 1952

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12201199493?profile=originalTate has announced the launch of the Tate Photography Series, a new publishing programme providing an introduction to some of the most important and exciting photographers at work today. Four titles will be published each year, all connected through a common theme. The first four books, on Liz Johnson Artur, Sheba Chhachhi, Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen and Sabelo Mlangeni explore community and solidarity in distinct ways. 

12201200296?profile=original Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen was born in Finland and studied in London, then moved to Newcastle upon Tyne in the 1960s. She has been based in the North East of England ever since, deeply rooted in the local community. Focusing on two of her photographic series, this book captures a working-class neighborhood and reveals the devastating impact that the redevelopment of Newcastle’s East End had on the community, but also the moments of joy experienced in daily life.

Liz Johnson Artur presents images from her series Time Don’t Run Here, made during the Black Lives Matter protests throughout the late spring of 2020 in London. Johnson Artur is a Ghanaian-Russian photographer and artist based in London whose work documents the lives of Black people in Africa and from across the African Diaspora, more recently focusing on the richness and complexity of Black British life. 

Sheba Chhachhi is a photographer, women's rights activist and an installation artist based in New Delhi. The powerful photographs reproduced in her book are selected from three major series, co-curated with her subjects. Interweaving the mythic and the social, her work, as she puts it, ‘is really about opening up a conversation, in the process of creating as well as sharing, to invite people to think about personal, social and public concerns, primarily around feminism and ecology.’

Sabelo Mlangeni is based in South Africa and works collaboratively with the people he photographs to tell the stories of communities on the periphery of society. He has focused on Johannesburg, as well as the rural areas surrounding his hometown of Driefontein. Mlangeni’s work seeks to re-center themes of friendship, love and joy in the face of ever-present risk. Above all, his images tell stories of seeking out your people, choosing a family and building a home, wherever you find yourself.

Each title is priced at £12. Details here: https://shop.tate.org.uk/books/tate-photography-series

Photograph: Sirkka-Liisa Konttinen, Kids with Collected Junk Near Byker Bridge (Byker),1971

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12201198858?profile=originalPhotographs made in the 1870s are to help with the conservation of the 11th-century Bayeux Tapestry. In a new partnership London's V&A Museum and the City of Bayeux have agreed to share research and expertise around the Tapestry. This is in lieu of planned loan of the Tapestry to the UK which was abandoned after a condition report discovered the Tapestry in a worse condition that expected. 

As part of a research, conservation and digitisation project, around 180 glass negatives of the tapestry taken by Edward Dossetter, which are in the V&A’s collection are to be digitised and will form part of a digital database showing the Tapestry's state when it was restored at the end of the nineteenth century. Dossetter photographed the tapestry in 1872 under the instruction of photographer Joseph Cundall as part of the first collaboration between the V&A (then the South Kensington Museum) and the City of Bayeux.

12201198499?profile=originalSix full-size copies were made from Dossetter’s negatives by the Arundel Society. These were then coloured by hand to create the longest composite photograph made in the 19th century. The partnership will also provide the City of Bayeux access to the two Arundel Society copies of the Bayeux Tapestry in the V&A collection, as well as opportunities for research, curatorial and scientific exchange.

See more: https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2022/05/19/digitising-bayeux-tapestry-victoria-and-albert-museum-work-with-french-city-research-famous-medieval-work

https://www.vam.ac.uk/blog/caring-for-our-collections/photographing-bayeux

Photographs: V&A Museum. Below: https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O118318/bayeux-tapestry-photograph-cundall-co/bayeux-tapestry-photograph-cundall--co/

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